Day: October 20, 2018

How does a franchise system such as the one used by Two Men and a Truck create value for its global partners?

Two Men and a Truck points to the size of the middle class in a country and the population’s mobility as the core factors that guide its market Page 483entry into a country and ultimately its success. Explain the company’s reasoning.

Is franchising the way Two Men and a Truck uses it a form of exporting or is it simply franchising as discussed in Chapter 15? Or, what is the company really exporting internationally?

How would you use business analytics to identify exporting opportunities for Two Men and a Truck?

READING

Two Men and a Truck

By some account, moving is ranked as the third most stressful event a person can undertake, after death of a relative and divorce of a marriage. Two Men and a Truck started as an after-school business for two high school boys in Lansing, Michigan. As a small business focused on local moving services, the company began in 1985 with $350, a hand-drawn logo, and an advertisement in a local community newspaper.

In 1989, Melanie Bergeron, the daughter of founder Mary Ellen Sheets, opened the first franchised office of Two Men and a Truck in her hometown of Atlanta, Georgia. Melanie is now board chair, with Brig Sorber as the chief executive officer and Jon Sorber as executive vice president. Randy Shacka, who joined the company as an intern in 2001, was promoted in 2012 to president. This is the first president of the company who did not come from the family.

Two Men and a Truck is no longer “two men and a truck.” The company has grown both domestically and internationally to most of the United States and some 320 locations worldwide. Two Men and a Truck is the fastest-growing franchised moving company in the United States, with more than $300 million in sales, 2,100 moving trucks, and some 6,000 workers. The average franchise grosses about $1.5 million annually. Bergeron said that “we never imagined being in the moving business—that is, until my mom and my brothers Brig and Jon scraped together some money to buy a truck to help raise extra cash for college.”

Two Men and a Truck has remained branded as “Two Men and a Truck” in all parts of the world in which it operates franchises (e.g., Canada, Ireland, United Kingdom). Names such as Dos Hombres and Two Blokes and a Lorry do not appeal to them! The company has decided to stick to the core American brand name because “that’s what master franchisers and their investors want,” said Bergeron. “The customers are less interested in whether it’s a U.S. brand . . . the appeal is the opposite . . . it’s a local [franchise] company that will be available when I need them. . . . They want the U.S. brand power and mystique.”

In going international to new markets, Two Men and a Truck’s primary factors to evaluate are the size of the middle class in a country and the population’s mobility. They use software tools to help pinpoint income levels by neighborhood and whether the housing market is primarily based on single- or multifamily units. The market for Two Men and a Truck is best where there is a good mix of both. In addition, Bergeron said that two other key areas in determining locations in which to operate include obtaining accurate market research and identifying potential master franchisees.

In the case of Two Men and a Truck going international, the industry itself also represented a challenge. There are plenty of moving businesses worldwide; why should franchisees represent Two Men and a Truck? The company’s answer to this market differentiation problem is its exceptional focus on customer service and a sophisticated web-based tracking system. Quality control, labor costs, and cycle time to complete a move are core performance metrics in the system. In fact, the company has become known in its industry for faster and better analytics to run the business. It has installed a private cloud system to make its business operations more efficient, using business analytics to capture and identify growth opportunities worldwide.

Sources: D. Barry, “Melanie Bergeron, Chair of the Board of Two Men and a Truck,” Exporters: The Wit and Wisdom of Small Businesspeople Who Sell Globally, 2013; C. Boulton, “Moving Company Gets a Lift from Faster Analytics,” The Wall Street Journal, August 20, 2013; A. Wittrock, “Two Men and a Truck Wins State Grant, Plans $4 Million Expansion of Lansing-Area Headquarters,” MLive, February 27, 2013.

How does a franchise system such as the one used by Two Men and a Truck create value for its global partners?

Two Men and a Truck points to the size of the middle class in a country and the population’s mobility as the core factors that guide its market Page 483entry into a country and ultimately its success. Explain the company’s reasoning.

Is franchising the way Two Men and a Truck uses it a form of exporting or is it simply franchising as discussed in Chapter 15? Or, what is the company really exporting internationally?

How would you use business analytics to identify exporting opportunities for Two Men and a Truck?

READING

Two Men and a Truck

By some account, moving is ranked as the third most stressful event a person can undertake, after death of a relative and divorce of a marriage. Two Men and a Truck started as an after-school business for two high school boys in Lansing, Michigan. As a small business focused on local moving services, the company began in 1985 with $350, a hand-drawn logo, and an advertisement in a local community newspaper.

In 1989, Melanie Bergeron, the daughter of founder Mary Ellen Sheets, opened the first franchised office of Two Men and a Truck in her hometown of Atlanta, Georgia. Melanie is now board chair, with Brig Sorber as the chief executive officer and Jon Sorber as executive vice president. Randy Shacka, who joined the company as an intern in 2001, was promoted in 2012 to president. This is the first president of the company who did not come from the family.

Two Men and a Truck is no longer “two men and a truck.” The company has grown both domestically and internationally to most of the United States and some 320 locations worldwide. Two Men and a Truck is the fastest-growing franchised moving company in the United States, with more than $300 million in sales, 2,100 moving trucks, and some 6,000 workers. The average franchise grosses about $1.5 million annually. Bergeron said that “we never imagined being in the moving business—that is, until my mom and my brothers Brig and Jon scraped together some money to buy a truck to help raise extra cash for college.”

Two Men and a Truck has remained branded as “Two Men and a Truck” in all parts of the world in which it operates franchises (e.g., Canada, Ireland, United Kingdom). Names such as Dos Hombres and Two Blokes and a Lorry do not appeal to them! The company has decided to stick to the core American brand name because “that’s what master franchisers and their investors want,” said Bergeron. “The customers are less interested in whether it’s a U.S. brand . . . the appeal is the opposite . . . it’s a local [franchise] company that will be available when I need them. . . . They want the U.S. brand power and mystique.”

In going international to new markets, Two Men and a Truck’s primary factors to evaluate are the size of the middle class in a country and the population’s mobility. They use software tools to help pinpoint income levels by neighborhood and whether the housing market is primarily based on single- or multifamily units. The market for Two Men and a Truck is best where there is a good mix of both. In addition, Bergeron said that two other key areas in determining locations in which to operate include obtaining accurate market research and identifying potential master franchisees.

In the case of Two Men and a Truck going international, the industry itself also represented a challenge. There are plenty of moving businesses worldwide; why should franchisees represent Two Men and a Truck? The company’s answer to this market differentiation problem is its exceptional focus on customer service and a sophisticated web-based tracking system. Quality control, labor costs, and cycle time to complete a move are core performance metrics in the system. In fact, the company has become known in its industry for faster and better analytics to run the business. It has installed a private cloud system to make its business operations more efficient, using business analytics to capture and identify growth opportunities worldwide.

Sources: D. Barry, “Melanie Bergeron, Chair of the Board of Two Men and a Truck,” Exporters: The Wit and Wisdom of Small Businesspeople Who Sell Globally, 2013; C. Boulton, “Moving Company Gets a Lift from Faster Analytics,” The Wall Street Journal, August 20, 2013; A. Wittrock, “Two Men and a Truck Wins State Grant, Plans $4 Million Expansion of Lansing-Area Headquarters,” MLive, February 27, 2013.

How does a franchise system such as the one used by Two Men and a Truck create value for its global partners?

Two Men and a Truck points to the size of the middle class in a country and the population’s mobility as the core factors that guide its market Page 483entry into a country and ultimately its success. Explain the company’s reasoning.

Is franchising the way Two Men and a Truck uses it a form of exporting or is it simply franchising as discussed in Chapter 15? Or, what is the company really exporting internationally?

How would you use business analytics to identify exporting opportunities for Two Men and a Truck?

READING

Two Men and a Truck

By some account, moving is ranked as the third most stressful event a person can undertake, after death of a relative and divorce of a marriage. Two Men and a Truck started as an after-school business for two high school boys in Lansing, Michigan. As a small business focused on local moving services, the company began in 1985 with $350, a hand-drawn logo, and an advertisement in a local community newspaper.

In 1989, Melanie Bergeron, the daughter of founder Mary Ellen Sheets, opened the first franchised office of Two Men and a Truck in her hometown of Atlanta, Georgia. Melanie is now board chair, with Brig Sorber as the chief executive officer and Jon Sorber as executive vice president. Randy Shacka, who joined the company as an intern in 2001, was promoted in 2012 to president. This is the first president of the company who did not come from the family.

Two Men and a Truck is no longer “two men and a truck.” The company has grown both domestically and internationally to most of the United States and some 320 locations worldwide. Two Men and a Truck is the fastest-growing franchised moving company in the United States, with more than $300 million in sales, 2,100 moving trucks, and some 6,000 workers. The average franchise grosses about $1.5 million annually. Bergeron said that “we never imagined being in the moving business—that is, until my mom and my brothers Brig and Jon scraped together some money to buy a truck to help raise extra cash for college.”

Two Men and a Truck has remained branded as “Two Men and a Truck” in all parts of the world in which it operates franchises (e.g., Canada, Ireland, United Kingdom). Names such as Dos Hombres and Two Blokes and a Lorry do not appeal to them! The company has decided to stick to the core American brand name because “that’s what master franchisers and their investors want,” said Bergeron. “The customers are less interested in whether it’s a U.S. brand . . . the appeal is the opposite . . . it’s a local [franchise] company that will be available when I need them. . . . They want the U.S. brand power and mystique.”

In going international to new markets, Two Men and a Truck’s primary factors to evaluate are the size of the middle class in a country and the population’s mobility. They use software tools to help pinpoint income levels by neighborhood and whether the housing market is primarily based on single- or multifamily units. The market for Two Men and a Truck is best where there is a good mix of both. In addition, Bergeron said that two other key areas in determining locations in which to operate include obtaining accurate market research and identifying potential master franchisees.

In the case of Two Men and a Truck going international, the industry itself also represented a challenge. There are plenty of moving businesses worldwide; why should franchisees represent Two Men and a Truck? The company’s answer to this market differentiation problem is its exceptional focus on customer service and a sophisticated web-based tracking system. Quality control, labor costs, and cycle time to complete a move are core performance metrics in the system. In fact, the company has become known in its industry for faster and better analytics to run the business. It has installed a private cloud system to make its business operations more efficient, using business analytics to capture and identify growth opportunities worldwide.

Sources: D. Barry, “Melanie Bergeron, Chair of the Board of Two Men and a Truck,” Exporters: The Wit and Wisdom of Small Businesspeople Who Sell Globally, 2013; C. Boulton, “Moving Company Gets a Lift from Faster Analytics,” The Wall Street Journal, August 20, 2013; A. Wittrock, “Two Men and a Truck Wins State Grant, Plans $4 Million Expansion of Lansing-Area Headquarters,” MLive, February 27, 2013.

You have decided that you would like to formally start an entrepreneurial business. To ensure the success of your business, you will produce a business plan. The plan will assess, compare and contrast alternative schools of thought, cultural and political differences which impact the application of management activities within the broad notion of entrepreneurship. The plan that you submit should contain at least the following components:

Title page

Table of contents

Executive summary (Abstract)

Business description

Definition of the market

Description of proposed products or services

Organization and management descriptions

Marketing strategy

Financial management

References Page to align with internal citations

Appendixes.

Your final submission should include all of the components described and should be submitted in an 8–10 page APA Word document. Use the class resources and research the Internet to help you in creating the plan. The links to Web resources provided in the unit material will also help you get a clearer picture of what is included in the business plan and what a finished business plan might look like.

The business plan should be researched and professionally written with all the components listed in the assignment description. Grammar, spelling, punctuation, and format are correct and professional. All sources should be cited and referenced using APA format.

You have decided that you would like to formally start an entrepreneurial business. To ensure the success of your business, you will produce a business plan. The plan will assess, compare and contrast alternative schools of thought, cultural and political differences which impact the application of management activities within the broad notion of entrepreneurship. The plan that you submit should contain at least the following components:

Title page

Table of contents

Executive summary (Abstract)

Business description

Definition of the market

Description of proposed products or services

Organization and management descriptions

Marketing strategy

Financial management

References Page to align with internal citations

Appendixes.

Your final submission should include all of the components described and should be submitted in an 8–10 page APA Word document. Use the class resources and research the Internet to help you in creating the plan. The links to Web resources provided in the unit material will also help you get a clearer picture of what is included in the business plan and what a finished business plan might look like.

The business plan should be researched and professionally written with all the components listed in the assignment description. Grammar, spelling, punctuation, and format are correct and professional. All sources should be cited and referenced using APA format.

You have decided that you would like to formally start an entrepreneurial business. To ensure the success of your business, you will produce a business plan. The plan will assess, compare and contrast alternative schools of thought, cultural and political differences which impact the application of management activities within the broad notion of entrepreneurship. The plan that you submit should contain at least the following components:

Title page

Table of contents

Executive summary (Abstract)

Business description

Definition of the market

Description of proposed products or services

Organization and management descriptions

Marketing strategy

Financial management

References Page to align with internal citations

Appendixes.

Your final submission should include all of the components described and should be submitted in an 8–10 page APA Word document. Use the class resources and research the Internet to help you in creating the plan. The links to Web resources provided in the unit material will also help you get a clearer picture of what is included in the business plan and what a finished business plan might look like.

The business plan should be researched and professionally written with all the components listed in the assignment description. Grammar, spelling, punctuation, and format are correct and professional. All sources should be cited and referenced using APA format.

You have decided that you would like to formally start an entrepreneurial business. To ensure the success of your business, you will produce a business plan. The plan will assess, compare and contrast alternative schools of thought, cultural and political differences which impact the application of management activities within the broad notion of entrepreneurship. The plan that you submit should contain at least the following components:

Title page

Table of contents

Executive summary (Abstract)

Business description

Definition of the market

Description of proposed products or services

Organization and management descriptions

Marketing strategy

Financial management

References Page to align with internal citations

Appendixes.

Your final submission should include all of the components described and should be submitted in an 8–10 page APA Word document. Use the class resources and research the Internet to help you in creating the plan. The links to Web resources provided in the unit material will also help you get a clearer picture of what is included in the business plan and what a finished business plan might look like.

The business plan should be researched and professionally written with all the components listed in the assignment description. Grammar, spelling, punctuation, and format are correct and professional. All sources should be cited and referenced using APA format.

You have decided that you would like to formally start an entrepreneurial business. To ensure the success of your business, you will produce a business plan. The plan will assess, compare and contrast alternative schools of thought, cultural and political differences which impact the application of management activities within the broad notion of entrepreneurship. The plan that you submit should contain at least the following components:

Title page

Table of contents

Executive summary (Abstract)

Business description

Definition of the market

Description of proposed products or services

Organization and management descriptions

Marketing strategy

Financial management

References Page to align with internal citations

Appendixes.

Your final submission should include all of the components described and should be submitted in an 8–10 page APA Word document. Use the class resources and research the Internet to help you in creating the plan. The links to Web resources provided in the unit material will also help you get a clearer picture of what is included in the business plan and what a finished business plan might look like.

The business plan should be researched and professionally written with all the components listed in the assignment description. Grammar, spelling, punctuation, and format are correct and professional. All sources should be cited and referenced using APA format.

You have decided that you would like to formally start an entrepreneurial business. To ensure the success of your business, you will produce a business plan. The plan will assess, compare and contrast alternative schools of thought, cultural and political differences which impact the application of management activities within the broad notion of entrepreneurship. The plan that you submit should contain at least the following components:

Title page

Table of contents

Executive summary (Abstract)

Business description

Definition of the market

Description of proposed products or services

Organization and management descriptions

Marketing strategy

Financial management

References Page to align with internal citations

Appendixes.

Your final submission should include all of the components described and should be submitted in an 8–10 page APA Word document. Use the class resources and research the Internet to help you in creating the plan. The links to Web resources provided in the unit material will also help you get a clearer picture of what is included in the business plan and what a finished business plan might look like.

The business plan should be researched and professionally written with all the components listed in the assignment description. Grammar, spelling, punctuation, and format are correct and professional. All sources should be cited and referenced using APA format.

You have decided that you would like to formally start an entrepreneurial business. To ensure the success of your business, you will produce a business plan. The plan will assess, compare and contrast alternative schools of thought, cultural and political differences which impact the application of management activities within the broad notion of entrepreneurship. The plan that you submit should contain at least the following components:

Title page

Table of contents

Executive summary (Abstract)

Business description

Definition of the market

Description of proposed products or services

Organization and management descriptions

Marketing strategy

Financial management

References Page to align with internal citations

Appendixes.

Your final submission should include all of the components described and should be submitted in an 8–10 page APA Word document. Use the class resources and research the Internet to help you in creating the plan. The links to Web resources provided in the unit material will also help you get a clearer picture of what is included in the business plan and what a finished business plan might look like.

The business plan should be researched and professionally written with all the components listed in the assignment description. Grammar, spelling, punctuation, and format are correct and professional. All sources should be cited and referenced using APA format.